Posted on 03/14/2005 12:33:42 PM PST by freebilly
SANTA CRUZ For Santa Cruz resident Midjann Velzy, the combination of drinking coffee and driving a car became "a potential road-rage situation."
Velzy swore off the strong stuff 13 years ago after flipping someone the proverbial bird during her commute home from Silicon Valley.
"There I was, trying to be in my Zen place," she said of that final, bad, caffeine-induced moment.
"Now I drink very little coffee," she said, "and its decaf only."
Her personal caffeine awareness campaign was ahead of its time.
A proclamation signed by Santa Cruz Mayor Mike Rotkin has declared this month "Caffeine Awareness Month" for all of Santa Cruz.
"Caffeine consumption can pose a significant hazard to health and longevity," reads the proclamation.
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"This is crazy," said Jim Morgan from a seat outside Caffe Bene on Cedar Street. He sipped a tall cup of black coffee and finished his hand-rolled cigarette.
He agreed that neither of his habits was terribly healthy.
"But a cup of java in the morning is a lot better than the old Turkish enema," he said.
The campaign endorsed by Rotkin is part of a national effort by Marina Kushner, author of the book, "Life Without Caffeine." Kushner is also the founder of a company that makes a soy-based coffee substitute.
Los Angeles Mayor James Hahn recently awarded Kushners Caffeine Awareness Alliance with a certificate of appreciation for educating the public on the dangers of caffeine.
"Im not saying people shouldnt drink coffee," said Rotkin about his proclamation. "But I think some people should really look at their intake."
Rotkin said the move was meant to target hard-core coffee drinkers only. He would not name names, but he says he has worked among the truly addicted.
"They are way too wired for their own good. Theyve got trigger responses to everything," he said. "Its unhealthy for themselves and others."
Rotkins own coffee intake of zero-to-two cups per day doesnt qualify as problem drinking, he said.
"But I dont want to be a hypocrite here. I like coffee and I do drink it," he said.
Among health problems associated with caffeine are heart disease, pancreas and bladder cancer, hypoglycemia, and central nervous system disorders, according to the proclamation.
Velzy, the commuter, says she knows about milder and more common side effects of caffeine consumption.
Her muscles became tense when she drank coffee, "because the lactic acid dehydrates your muscles, and then the caffeine goes to those areas," she said.
UC Santa Cruz student Kerry McGrath said shes been off regular coffee now for two of her 26 years.
"You know women and osteoporosis you cant do that," she said after placing an order for decaf at Lulu Carpenters.
Heavy caffeine consumption has, in some studies, been linked to osteoporosis in women. Decaffeinated coffee typically contains 5 to 6 milligrams of caffeine per 8-oz. cup, as compared with regular coffee, which can contain more than 200 milligrams per 8-oz cup.
"Ill still get a buzz from this," McGrath said when her drink was delivered.
"Decaf really doesnt taste the same, though," she said, looking glumly into her cup.
After deciding that caffeine made her "stressed and impatient" toward her kids, Nora Baer cut down by experimenting with teas and other less-caffeinated drinks.
"I was nervous, my heart was beating too fast, I didnt want to talk to people," she said of the ill-effects of being a coffee junkie. "I just didnt function very well."
Baer, who was sipping a chai on her day off, said she thinks the caffeine-awareness campaign is "a very good idea."
She still drinks two cups of regular coffee on workdays, and would like to drink less.
"Its the one bad thing I still havent been able to cut out," she said.
Jim Murukami, imbiber of up to eight tall cups of regular coffee per day, was unfazed by the news that March is caffeine awareness month.
He lives an otherwise healthy life, he said, and extreme coffee drinking is the least offensive bad habit one can have.
"This is the last commonly accepted drug," he said as he started in on his third or fourth cup. "The reality is that people need a vice. ... and you cant exactly take a heroin break at work."
Highly addictive means that you get addicted to it quickly and easily, not that it's a hard addiction to shake. Heroin and nicotine are also highly addictive, but they are a lot harder to detoxify.
And they are home grown too.
So many potential California/Starbucks jokes...so little time! 8^)
Sugar also has physiological and psychological effects. Everything you eat will affect you in both areas in one way or another. GET RID OF THE HEALTH POLICE.They are nothing but another extension of the left wacko socialist agenda.
two words: dirty hippies
Driving highway 17 from Silicon Valley to the People's Republic of Santa Cruz is an especially bad place to do it as well.
Good point. I've been there and remember how flaky it was.
I agree, I don't think that caffeine is her biggest addiction.
Agreed.
Oh joy - a new group to demonize! Wait for ads warning of the dangers of 'second-hand coffee aroma.' Sheesh.
Then who would they be able to micro-manage?
But they sure used to have great red snapper in that restaurant at the end of the pier!!
How can anyone drive without flipping the bird?
They could dictate the rate of decomposition in all the corpses.
And they could arrange the bodies in interesting ways.
The ACLU blames George W. Bush. Clinton blames the NRA.
I've got a simple answer for them. Go to the nearest Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Find others who don't drink coffee and enjoy the company. And leave the rest of us alone. [No offense to LDS - for you it is a choice ... ]
http://www.ineedcoffee.com/01/01/enema/
Well, there are some places where the bird might catch the slug.
A few months back my wife and I walked about 3 miles through downtown Salt Lake City looking for coffee. We finally had to settle for some bad coffee from a Cinnabon at a food court attached to the Marriott....
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